Originally Posted by
pilotinsky
I would answer YES; since the 4-6hrs home is Part 91; so it doesn't apply to 135.267 next day after the required consecutive 10hr rest, and it's also a seperated assignment, not as one. Correct me if I m wrong, please.
I m also working on the 135.265 scheduled; 2 areas I have trouble understanding are (b) & (d).
"10hrs consec. rest for more than 8hr but less then 9hrs scheduled "flight time."
Could I accept schedule flight time more than 8hrs?
About reduced rest: can u give me an example in scenario?
Thank you so much for helping me; i m preparing for interview w/Cape Air and I really like make sure I can cover the 135 as I didn't have 135 exp. (CFI-willing to learn background)
Answer is NO, even thought it's a Part 91 leg, it is a return leg and you are still being paid to bring that aircraft in position or yourself home, so it does count against your 8 in 24(consecutive hours) as per Part 135.267 (B)(1)
So I read the whole paragraph, and I'll say my previous statement seems valid. In subpart (A)(4) 8 for one pilot in any 24 consecutive hours, or (5) 8 for 2 pilots between required rest periods.
So I'd say No, you cannot accept more than 8 hrs of flight time per given rest period(and of course how you fly the 8 is whether you're single or two crewed)
If you hit 8hrs up to 9, you have to get 10hrs of rest. This as I mentioned above is for unforeseen circumstances only that your flight times were longer than predicted.
Now usually the calculated flight times aren't the problem, it's usually your duty day that becomes an issue for at least the unscheduled guys. Your freight/pax are late, weather holds you on the ground longer, etc.. If you're going to knowingly fly out of your duty period, that's a big no-no! Flying over 8 is harder to do, because the planning software etc.. today is good enough to hit times within .1 over a whole night(at least for my profiles).
I don't have any experience with reduced rest operations, I'm going to defer that one to someone who has.